jrlen balane said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 02:41:
sir, what seemed to be the problem with this:
def process(list_of_lines):
data_points = []
for line in list_of_lines:
data_points.append(int(line))
return data_points
data_file = open('C:/Documents and
Robert Campbell rcx at mchsi.com writes:
I am not a programmer, but have decided to learn Python. I am
wondering if anyone has used the Activestate ActivePython and what are the
advantages/disadvantages of using it rather than the standard Python
tools.
I use it, but I haven't used an
Brian van den Broek said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 03:51:
jrlen balane said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 02:41:
sir, what seemed to be the problem with this:
SNIP
Hi,
I think the traceback is my fault from an oversight in the code I sent
you when you posted before. Sorry about that :-[
Brian van den Broek wrote:
jrlen balane said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 02:41:
[...]
data_file = open('C:/Documents and Settings/nyer/Desktop/nyer.txt', 'r')
[...]
The immediate one, due to my advice, is that each line of your file ends
with a newline character ('\n'). So, you cannot call int
Brian van den Broek said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 03:51:
jrlen balane said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 02:41:
sir, what seemed to be the problem with this:
def process(list_of_lines):
data_points = []
for line in list_of_lines:
data_points.append(int(line))
return
Traceback (most recent call last):
File C:\Python23\practices\opentxt, line 12, in -toplevel-
process(data)
File C:\Python23\practices\opentxt, line 6, in process
data_points.append(int(line))
ValueError: invalid literal for int():
Hi Brian,
Ah, think about empty
Brian van den Broek schrieb:
Brian van den Broek said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 03:51:
jrlen balane said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 02:41:
sir, what seemed to be the problem with this:
def process(list_of_lines):
data_points = []
for line in list_of_lines:
Title: RE:
robert wrote
Message: 1
Date: Wed, 16 Feb 2005 21:49:14 -0600
From: Robert Campbell [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Tutor] Active Python
To: tutor@python.org
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Hi,
I am not a programmer, but have
Hello I'm very new to python but need to write a script to update a single geodatabase table in arcview9 from several dbf files. If I can do this I can then use windows scheduled tasks to up date the tables automatically. The field names in the dbs files are or can be slightly different from
Hello again,
First off, please accept my apologies for my last message, which was sorely
lacking in the detail department. I'm such a beginner with programming that I
assumed the error would be glaringly obvious to an experienced programmer and
would jump of the page/screen right away. This
Kevin Hine wrote:
Hello I'm very new to python but need to write a script to update a
single geodatabase table in arcview9 from several dbf files. If I can do
this I can then use windows scheduled tasks to up date the tables
automatically. The field names in the dbs files are or can be slightly
Chris Bromley said unto the world upon 2005-02-17 11:05:
SNIP
Prior to running the script I use the check button in the
PythonWin and the scripts syntax is fine. When I run the script
though, the message
Script C:\ dBase_File_To_Shapefile.py returned exit code 0
appears in the status bar at
At 03:04 PM 2/16/2005, Brian van den Broek wrote:
Terry Carroll said unto the world upon 2005-02-16 16:18:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005, Bob Gailer wrote:
Whenever you find yourself writing an if statement ask whether this
would be better handled by subclasses. Whenever you find yourself about
to write a
Thanks that's much nicer.
On Fri, 11 Feb 2005 22:28:55 -0500, Kent Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you iterate over the author nodes you can check the user name and password
of each in turn.
Not tested code!
def authenticateAuthor(author, password):
authorxml = 'author.xml'
Does it make sense to do this:
In [2]: class AB:
...: pass
...:
In [3]: a = AB()
In [4]: a
Out[4]: __main__.AB instance at 0x8428bec
In [5]: class BC:
...: def __init__(self, foo):
...: self.foo = foo
In [6]: b = BC(a)
In [7]: b.foo
Out[7]: __main__.AB instance at
No-one answered question
So, I e-mail it again
Help me please
I wrote this to add 2 numbers...
print Please input data
number1 = int(raw_input( ))
number2 = int(raw_input(+ ))
total = number1 + number2
print total
raw_input()
I want to make output like this...
1 + 1 = 2
But, actually... it looks
Luis N wrote:
Does it make sense to do this:
In [2]: class AB:
...: pass
...:
In [3]: a = AB()
In [4]: a
Out[4]: __main__.AB instance at 0x8428bec
In [5]: class BC:
...: def __init__(self, foo):
...: self.foo = foo
In [6]: b = BC(a)
In [7]: b.foo
Out[7]: __main__.AB
Does it make sense to do this:
That depends on what you are trying to do!
If its to make scrambled eggs thewn nope, no sense
whatsoever, but if writing a programme storing an
instance inside another instance is very common
indeed! :-)
In [2]: class AB:
...: pass
...:
In [3]: a
Hi Kent,
So the layering is
GUI - user interaction
Application functionality
CbDao - application-specific database access
DbAccess - generic database access, easy to use
JDBC connection - raw database access, not so easy to use
This sounds a lot like what I'm aiming for in a project, the
I'm using HTMLParser.py to parse XHTML and invalid tag is throwing an
exception. How do I handle this?
1. Below is the faulty markup. Notice the missing . Both Firefox
and IE6 correct automatically but HTMLParser is less forgiving. My
code has to be able to treat this gracefully because I
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005 15:54:43 -0800 (PST), Terry Carroll [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Wed, 16 Feb 2005, Robert Campbell wrote:
I am not a programmer, but have decided to learn Python. I am wondering
if anyone has used the Activestate ActivePython and what are the
advantages/disadvantages
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